US/World News

Belgian school accused of inaction re abuse of Jewish student

(JTA) — The mother of a Jewish boy who said she took her son out of a Brussels public school because of antisemitic bullying filed a police complaint against the school’s management for alleged incitement to discrimination. The complaint concerns the school’s alleged inaction on reported abuse that, according to the pupil, went on earlier this year at a high school in Uccle, an affluent neighborhood. The mother said the bullying at the Athénée Royal Uccle 2 school forced her to enroll her son at a Jewish school last month. The boy was identified only as Samuel (not his real name) and his mother as Helene.

According to the report, the abuse began after Samuel had a falling out with his former best friend, who was the only person at the school whom Samuel had told that he was Jewish. The friend told the rest of the class Samuel was Jewish and on Feb. 5, a classmate allegedly told Samuel “get lost, dirty Jew.” A fistfight ensued. According to Helene, the school treated the incident as a common brawl rather than racist harassment. Over the following weeks, other pupils threatened Samuel and made antisemitic statements at him “two, three times each week,” said Helene. In one incident, a pupil reportedly told Samuel: “If you’re in favor of Israel we’ll break your skull.” When Helene came to pick up Samuel from school on March 22 following terrorist attacks that killed 32 people that day in Brussels, she heard a pupil declare inside the school that the attacks were Israel’s fault, adding “Allah hu akbar,” an Arabic expression meaning “Allah is the greatest.” She enrolled Samuel at a Jewish school two days later, citing the school’s “treatment of antisemitic abuse as though they were [neutral] taunts.”

The school’s administration indicated that its decision not to react stemmed from a desire not to stigmatize Muslims. “In light of the current context of stigmatization of certain communities, especially after the March 22 attacks, it does not appear appropriate to return to this case, which has since been resolved,” the school said, adding that it held a day of talks encouraging tolerance for the students from Samuel’s age group.

Joel Rubinfeld, president of the Belgian League Against Anti-Semitism, said the school’s actions meant “the victim had to go away, the perpetrators – they got to stay.” “There is no sanctuary for Jews in the public education system,” Rubinfeld said.

Samuel’s case is one of several recent incidents, including the online shaming last year by classmates of a pro-Israel high school student who also left the public education system for a Jewish school. These cases, Rubinfeld said last year, are turning Belgian schools into “Jew-free” zones.

SHARE
RELATED POSTS
Justice served
NY Times posts job for Palestinian affairs reporter
BDS can’t convince Argentina’s soccer team to cancel Israel match

Leave Your Reply